Budd v. Camden Horse Railroad
Budd v. Camden Horse Railroad
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This is an action of ejectment to recover pos-. session of land sixteen and one-half feet in width and fourteen hundred and twenty-seven feet in length, bounded by the centre and northerly lines of Ferry road in the city of Camden. Upon this land and within the bounds of the highway the defendants have constructed a double-track street railway, and have located poles carrying wires through which electric power is transmitted. The fee is in the plaintiffs, subject to the easement for a street. The tracks and poles are located in pursuance of, and in conformity with, a city ordinance and are entirely within the highway. No sidewalk has been constructed at this point. The. plaintiffs’ substantial
Although ejectment may be maintained by the owner of the soil in a public highway against one who ¿ttempts to appropriate it to a purpose not within the limits of the public easement, it is now settled that the action cannot be maintained against a public corporation occupying the street within the limits of the public right; nor against the agencies through which the public corporation exercises its rights. French v. Robb, 38 Vroom 260, 263. It is also settled that the substitution of electric motors with the trolley system, including poles set within the curb line, for horses on street railroads does not, per se, create an additional easement. Roebling v. Trenton Passenger Railway Co., 29 Id. 666, 673; Montclair Military Academy v. North Jersey Street Railway, 41 Id. 229.
The opinion in the Eoebling case contained an intimation that it must not be construed so as to allow the railway company to place the track so near the curb line as to interfere unreasonably with the owner’s access to his property, or with the enjoyment of the privileges which owners of abutting-lands are entitled to enjoy in a public highway in front of their premises. The question now presented is whether the defendants’ tracks are so constructed and their poles so located as to interfere unreasonably with the owner’s access to his property.
The location of the poles and the ties at or near the northerly1 limit of the street may, indeed, prevent tire future construction of a sidewalk'of the width ordinarily required by the ordinances of Camden; but this is a matter of purely municipal regulation, and the ordinance of 1886, even if otherwise applicable to the present ease, cannot he applicable if the later ordinance of 1896 has made the building of such a sidewalk impossible. The ordinance of 1886 seems, however, to be applicable only to streets thirty feet in width, in the city of Camden, and in the present case the centre line of Ferry road is the boundary line of the city, so that only the northerly sixteen and one-half feet is within the city limits. That the ordinance was intended to apply only to streets wholly within the city is indicated by the fact that it undertakes to provide for sidewalks on each side of the street and makes no provision for sidewalks on one side only. We cannot agree with the plaintiffs’ contention that the ordinance of 1886 gave them a vested right to have a sidewalk seven and a half feet wide.
The danger arising from the operation of cars by electricity in the street is, like the injury by vibration in the Roebling case, one of those injurious consequences which result from the legitimate and proper use to which public thoroughfares are devoted. It is not unlike the danger arising from increased traffic in the streets by an increasing population.
It is contended by the plaintiffs that they' suffer a special injury, because, if fences are built, the gates must swing inward and not outward; if houses are built, the doors must
TJpon the whole case we fail to find such unreasonable user of the highway as would amount to an additional servitude.
The judgment must therefore be affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- HIRAM E. BUDD AND ISAAC W. BUDD, IN ERROR v. CAMDEN HORSE RAILROAD COMPANY AND THE CAMDEN AND SUBURBAN RAILWAY COMPANY, IN ERROR
- Status
- Published